Bump.
I am still having a problem where Enpass does not prompt me to save credentials when I log into a new site. When I created it manually and then use that entry, the web site tells me my credentials are invalid. However, I can type those same credentials in and have a successful login. The site with the issue is marriott.com.
I'm not sure why this happens but if you can provide some answers, I would greatly appreciate it.
Thank you.

I'm not so sure it was Chrome, but when I first downloaded the Windows version, I was adding logins manually with my normal password. Then I would go to the web site log in with my stored credentials. I would then change my password and then instruct Enpass to store the updated information. But it did only on about half the passwords. I posted the issue in the desktop forum (no one responded), but decided to start over and wiped out my vault. The 2nd time, I just went to a web site, logged in and Enpass offered to save my credentials. That worked much better.
Good to know about Enpass vs others as I was having buyer's remorse. For the most part it seems to be working okay, though.

I hope so too. There are some features I like (one-time charge vs subscription, ability to save vault locally vs the cloud), but having never used PW management software before, I'm finding it a little cumbersome. I also had some problems with the Windows 10 client + Chrome extension so I am a little concerned about whether I made the correct choice in purchasing it. Thank you for your feedback, Dentonthebear.

I'm having a problem with Enpass in that in one account, it uses my password in both the user name and password fields. If I enable autofill in browsers and enpass keyboard, Enpass fills in the correct information at the web site, but not in the app. I'm afraid of adding additional passwords until I know why this is happening. Thank you.

I downloaded the client for Windows 10 and enabled the Chrome extension. As I entered passwords into the application, I was told some passwords were really bad and some were just bad. So after I added a couple of them, I went back and changed one or two (happy that I had the old ones written down). I swear I tested them when I changed them by logging into the web sites and then letting the browser extension fill in the data. Today when I tried them, some of the sites were telling me 'invalid login' so I tried the old passwords -- and they worked.
A second problem was two of my accounts (aa.com) and (southwest.com) did not accept my passwords from the Enpass browser extension. When I typed the password in manually, I was able to log in, but not if they autofilled from the browser extension. I checked the passwords that were stored and they matched what I typed and I made sure there were no extra spaces.
Finally, I noticed that one of the user names on one of my accounts was the user name from a different account. I am pretty sure I did not do this, but I only noticed it on one account so maybe it was my error.
Because of all the problems above, I got concerned about the integrity of the data, so I deleted everything from the vault and I input the information again. This time, I went to each web site to log in and then said SAVE when I was prompted to do so by the browser extension.
So far, my passwords are stored locally and I only used them on one device, so I know it's not a sync issue between devices or platforms.
I am interested in the software, but am not sure I want to purchase because I don't know if it's totally reliable. Is there a manual of some sort? Best practices on how data's supposed to be created in the vault?
Thank you for any insight you can provide.
PS, I am using the Windows 10 version of Enpass, 6.1.1 (424), and whatever browser extension is most current (I just installed 7/25/19).